
ArmInfo. The explosion in the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas has temporarily knocked Iran out of the trade game, and has hit not only Tehran, political scientist Vahe Davtyan is sure.
The expert noted that while the world press is focusing on the top - the number of victims, destruction, chemicals - something much more important remains in the shadows: the key junction of the international transport corridor "North-South" has gone up in the air.
"The very route that Russia is actively promoting as an alternative to the Suez Canal. The very one that is supposed to connect St. Petersburg with Mumbai via Iranian ports. The port in Bandar Abbas is not just a warehouse and a berth. It is a geopolitical asset that handles tens of millions of tons of cargo per year. Containers, oil, equipment, and grain go through it. This is where flows from Russia to India were supposed to flow - faster, cheaper, and bypassing the West. And now this route is under threat. An accident? Negligence? Or a signal," the Armenian political scientist asked.
Davtyan noted that official Tehran, touching on the causes of the explosion, talks about non-observance of safety regulations during storage of ammonium perchlorate, a component of rocket fuel. "A convenient version. Especially against the backdrop of the recent missile exchange with Israel. But behind the scenes, other versions are already being voiced. The explosion, in fact, temporarily knocked Iran out of the trade game. The suspension of the port's work is already hitting exports and petrochemicals. And considering that military components are stored on site, it is possible that this was "not an accident." And here is Russia. Moscow is betting on the "North-South" as an artery of the future: to transport goods to India, bring spices, rice, tea, pharmaceuticals and equipment. To escape from the oil dictate of China. To play the Great Game. Iran is the key. Bandar Abbas is the castle. Was it blown up for no reason? Or to remind - the castle can be fragile," the political scientist continued.
The Armenian expert is sure that this is not just an incident. "This is a litmus test. If the port is not followed by reforms, protection, international audit and real investments, the entire North-South corridor will hang by a thread. And if they do, it means that both Moscow and Tehran have seriously decided to play the long game," Davtyan summed up in his Telegram channel.
Earlier, it became known from the media that a strong explosion occurred in the Shahid Rajaee port in the city of Bandar Abbas in southern Iran on the morning of April 26. According to preliminary data, 25 people were killed and several hundred were injured. Information is circulating in the media that containers with components for the production of rocket fuel exploded.